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The Ladle That Fell From the Moon
An old Chinese Story

From the 1919 Young Folks Treasury
ONCE there was an old woman who lived on
what she got by wile from her relatives and neighbors. Her husband's brother
lived alone with his only son, in a house near hers, and when the son
brought home a wife the old woman went to call on the bride. During the call
she inquired of the bride whether she had not, since her arrival in the
house, heard a scratching at night among the boxes containing her wedding
outfit. The bride said she had not. A few days later the old woman came
again, and during the visit the bride remarked that, before the matter was
mentioned, she had heard no scratching among her boxes, but that since that
time she had listened for it, and had heard it every night. The old woman
advised her to look carefully after her clothing, saying that there were
evidently many mice in the house, and that she would be likely at any time
to find her best garments nibbled into shreds. The old woman knew there was
no cat in the house, but she inquired whether there was one, and on hearing
that there was not, she offered to lend the young woman her own
black-and-white cat, saying that it would soon extirpate all the mice. The
bride accepted the loan, and the old woman brought the cat, and left it in
the bride's apartment. After a few hours the cat disappeared, and the bride,
supposing it to have gone home, made no search for it. It did, indeed, go
home, and the old woman secretly disposed of it; but several days later she
came to the young woman and said that, when she lent the cat, her house had
been free from mice, but that, as soon as the cat was gone, the mice came
and multiplied so fast that now everything was overrun by them, and she
would be obliged to take the cat home again. The young woman told her that
the cat went away the same day that it came, and she had supposed it had
gone home. The old woman said it had not, and that nothing could compensate
her for the loss of it, for she had reared it herself; that there was never
before seen such a cat for catching mice; that a cat, spotted as that one
was, was seldom found; and that it was of the rare breed which gave rise to
the common saying:
Is worth its weight in silver coins."
and that the weight of her cat was two hundred ounces.
The young woman was greatly surprised by this estimate of the value of
the lost cat, and went to her father-in-law and related all that had
occurred. The father-in-law, knowing the character of the old woman, could
neither eat nor sleep, so harassed was he by the expectation that she would
worry his daughter-in-law till the two hundred ounces of silver should be
paid. The young woman, being a new-comer, thought but lightly of the matter,
till the old woman came again and again to make mention of the cat. When it
became apparent that she must defend herself, the young woman asked her
father-in-law if he had ever lent anything to the old woman; and when he
said he could not remember having lent anything, she begged him to think
carefully, and see if he could not recall the loan of a tool, a dish, or a
fagot. He finally recollected that he had lent to her an old wooden ladle,
but he said it originally cost but a few farthings, and was certainly not
worth speaking about.
The next time the old woman came to dun for the amount due for the cat,
the young woman asked her to return the borrowed ladle. The old woman said
that the ladle was old and valueless; that she had allowed the children to
play with it, and that they had dropped it in the dirt, where it had lain
until she had picked it up and used it for kindling. The bride responded:
"You expect to enrich yourself and your family by means of your cat. I and
my family also want money. Since you cannot give back the ladle, we will
both go before the magistrate and present our cases. If your cat is judged
to be worth more than my ladle I will pay you the excess; and if my ladle be
worth more than your cat, then you must pay me." Being sure that the cat
would, by the judge, be considered of greater value than the ladle, the old
woman agreed to the proposition, and the two went before the magistrate. The
young woman courteously gave precedence to the elder, and allowed her to
make the accusation. The old woman set forth her case, and claimed two
hundred ounces of silver as a compensation for the loss of the cat. When she
had concluded her statement, the judge called on the young woman for her
defense. She said she could not disprove the statement, but that the claim
was offset by a ladle that had been borrowed by the ladle that had been
borrowed by the plaintiff. There was a common saying:
"In the moon overhead, at its full, you can see The trunk, branch and
leaf of a cinnamon tree."
A branch from this tree had one night been blown down before her
father-in-law's door, and he had had a ladle made from the wood. Whatever
the ladle was put into never diminished by use. Whether wine, oil, rice, or
money, the bulk remained the same if no ladle beside this one were used in
dipping it. A foreign inn-keeper, hearing of this ladle, came and offered
her father-in-law three thousand ounces of silver for it, but the offer was
refused. And this ladle was the one that the plaintiff had borrowed and
destroyed.
The magistrate, on hearing this defense, understood that the cat had been
a pretext for extortion, and decided that the two claims offset each other,
so that no payment was due from either one.
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